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date: 9 juni 99
author: Noam Chomsky
subject: internationaal/Kosovo
Kosovo Peace Accord
On March 24, U.S.-led NATO air forces began to pound the Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia (FYR, Serbia and Montenegro), including
Kosovo, which NATO regards as a province of Serbia. On June 3,
NATO and Serbia reached a Peace Accord. The U.S. declared victory,
having successfully concluded its "10-week struggle to compel Mr.
Milosevic to say uncle," Blaine Harden reported in the New York
Times. It would therefore be unnecessary to use ground forces to
"cleanse Serbia" as Harden had recommended in a lead story
headlined "How to Cleanse Serbia." The recommendation was natural
in the light of American history, which is dominated by the theme
of ethnic cleansing from its origins and to the present day,
achievements celebrated in the names given to military attack
helicopters and other weapons of destruction. A qualification is
in order, however: the term "ethnic cleansing" is not really
appropriate: U.S. cleansing operations have been ecumenical;
Indochina and Central America are two recent illustrations.
While declaring victory, Washington did not yet declare peace: the
bombing continues until the victors determine that their
interpretation of the Kosovo Accord has been imposed. From the
outset, the bombing had been cast as a matter of cosmic
significance, a test of a New Humanism, in which the "enlightened
states" (Foreign Affairs) open a new era of human history guided
by "a new internationalism where the brutal repression of whole
ethnic groups will no longer be tolerated" (Tony Blair). The
enlightened states are the United States and its British
associate, perhaps also others who enlist in their crusades for
justice.
Apparently the rank of "enlightened states" is conferred by
definition. One finds no attempt to provide evidence or argument,
surely not from their history. The latter is in any event deemed
irrelevant by the familiar doctrine of "change of course," invoked
regularly in the ideological institutions to dispatch the past
into the deepest recesses of the memory hole, thus deterring the
threat that some might ask the most obvious questions: with
institutional structures and distribution of power essentially
unchanged, why should one expect a radical shift in policy -- or
any at all, apart from tactical adjustments?
But such questions are off the agenda. "From the start the Kosovo
problem has been about how we should react when bad things happen
in unimportant places," global analyst Thomas Friedman explained
in the New York Times as the Accord was announced. He proceeds to
laud the enlightened states for pursuing his moral principle that
"once the refugee evictions began, ignoring Kosovo would be
wrong...and therefore using a huge air war for a limited objective
was the only thing that made sense."
A minor difficulty is that concern over the "refugee evictions"
could not have been the motive for the "huge air war." The United
Nations Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) reported its first
registered refugees outside of Kosovo on March 27 (4000), three
days after the bombings began. The toll increased until June 4,
reaching a reported total of 670,000 in the neighboring countries
(Albania, Macedonia), along with an estimated 70,000 in Montenegro
(within the FYR), and 75,000 who had left for other countries. The
figures, which are unfortunately all too familiar, do not include
the unknown numbers who have been displaced within Kosovo, some
2-300,000 in the year before the bombing according to NATO, a
great many more afterwards.
Uncontroversially, the "huge air war" precipitated a sharp
escalation of ethnic cleansing and other atrocities. That much has
been reported consistently by correspondents on the scene and in
retrospective analyses in the press. The same picture is presented
in the two major documents that seek to portray the bombing as a
reaction to the humanitarian crisis in Kosovo. The most extensive
one, provided by the State Department in May, is suitably entitled
"Erasing History: Ethnic Cleansing in Kosovo"; the second is the
Indictment of Milosevic and associates by the International
Tribunal on War Crimes in Yugoslavia after the U.S. and Britain
"opened the way for what amounted to a remarkably fast indictment
by giving [prosecutor Louise] Arbour access to intelligence and
other information long denied to her by Western governments," the
New York Times reported, with two full pages devoted to the
Indictment. Both documents hold that the atrocities began "on or
about January 1"; in both, however, the detailed chronology
reveals that atrocities continued about as before until the
bombing led to a very sharp escalation. That surely came as no
surprise. Commanding General Wesley Clark at once described these
consequences as "entirely predictable" -- an exaggeration of
course; nothing in human affairs is that predictable, though ample
evidence is now available revealing that the consequences were
anticipated, for reasons readily understood without access to
secret intelligence.
One small index of the effects of "the huge air war" was offered
by Robert Hayden, director of the Center for Russian and East
European Studies of the University of Pittsburgh: "the casualties
among Serb civilians in the first three weeks of the war are
higher than all of the casualties on both sides in Kosovo in the
three months that led up to this war, and yet those three months
were supposed to be a humanitarian catastrophe." True, these
particular consequences are of no account in the context of the
jingoist hysteria that was whipped up to demonize Serbs, reaching
intriguing heights as bombing openly targeted the civilian society
and hence required more fervent advocacy.
By chance, at least a hint of a more credible answer to Friedman's
rhetorical question was given in the Times on the same day in a
report from Ankara by Stephen Kinzer. He writes that "Turkey's
best-known human rights advocate entered prison" to serve his
sentence for having "urged the state to reach a peaceful
settlement with Kurdish rebels." A few days earlier, Kinzer had
indicated obliquely that there is more to the story: "Some [Kurds]
say they have been oppressed under Turkish rule, but the
Government insists that they are granted the same rights as other
citizens." One may ask whether this really does justice to some of
the most extreme ethnic cleansing operations of the mid '90s, with
tens of thousands killed, 3500 villages destroyed, some 2.5 to 3
million refugees, and hideous atrocities that easily compare to
those recorded daily in the front pages for selected enemies,
reported in detail by the major human rights organizations but
ignored. These achievements were carried out thanks to massive
military support from the United States, increasing under Clinton
as the atrocities peaked, including jet planes, attack
helicopters, counterinsurgency equipment, and other means of
terror and destruction, along with training and intelligence
information for some of the worst killers.
Recall that these crimes have been proceeding through the '90s
within NATO itself, and under the jurisdiction of the Council of
Europe and the European Court of Human Rights, which continues to
hand down judgments against Turkey for its U.S.-supported
atrocities. It took real discipline for participants and
commentators "not to notice" any of this at the celebration of
NATO's 50th anniversary in April. The discipline was particularly
impressive in light of the fact that the celebration was clouded
by somber concerns over ethnic cleansing -- by
officially-designated enemies, not by the enlightened states that
are to rededicate themselves to their traditional mission of
bringing justice and freedom to the suffering people of the world,
and to defend human rights, by force if necessary, under the
principles of the New Humanism.
These crimes, to be sure, are only one illustration of the answer
given by the enlightened states to the profound question of "how
we should react when bad things happen in unimportant places." We
should intervene to escalate the atrocities, not "looking away"
under a "double standard," the common evasion when such marginalia
are impolitely adduced. That also happens to be the mission that
was conducted in Kosovo, as revealed clearly by the course of
events, though not the version refracted through the prism of
ideology and doctrine, which do not gladly tolerate the
observation that a consequence of the "the huge air war" was a
change from a year of atrocities on the scale of the annual
(U.S.-backed) toll in Colombia in the 1990s to a level that might
have approached atrocities within NATO/Europe itself in the 1990s
had the bombing continued.
The marching orders from Washington, however, are the usual ones:
Focus laser-like on the crimes of today's official enemy, and do
not allow yourself to be distracted by comparable or worse crimes
that could easily be mitigated or terminated thanks to the crucial
role of the enlightened states in perpetuating them, or escalating
them when power interests so dictate. Let us obey the orders,
then, and keep to Kosovo.
A minimally serious investigaton of the Kosovo Accord must review
the diplomatic options of March 23, the day before "huge air war"
was launched, and compare them with the agreement reached by NATO
and Serbia on June 3. Here we have to distinguish two versions:
(1) the facts, and (2) the spin -- that is, the U.S./NATO version
that frames reporting and commentary in the enlightened states.
Even the most cursory look reveals that the facts and the spin
differ sharply. Thus the New York Times presented the text of the
Accord with an insert headed: "Two Peace Plans: How they Differ."
The two peace plans are the Rambouillet (Interim) Agreement
presented to Serbia as a take-it-or-be-bombed ultimatum on March
23, and the Kosovo Peace Accord of June 3. But in the real world
there are three "peace plans," two of which were on the table on
March 23: the Rambouillet Agreement and the Serb National Assembly
Resolutions responding to it.
Let us begin with the two peace plans of March 23, asking how they
differed and how they compare with the Kosovo Peace Accord of June
3, then turning briefly to what we might reasonably expect if we
break the rules and pay some attention to the (ample) precedents.
The Rambouillet Agreement called for complete military occupation
and political control of Kosovo by NATO, and effective NATO
military occupation of the rest of Yugoslavia at NATO's will. NATO
is to "constitute and lead a military force" (KFOR) that "NATO
will establish and deploy" in and around Kosovo, "operating under
the authority and subject to the direction and political control
of the North Atlantic Council (NAC) through the NATO chain of
command"; "the KFOR commander is the final authority within
theater regarding interpretation of this chapter [Implementation
of the Agreement] and his interpretations are binding on all
Parties and persons" (with an irrelevant qualification). Within a
brief time schedule, all Yugoslav army forces and Ministry of
Interior police are to redeploy to "approved cantonment sites,"
then to withdraw to Serbia, apart from small units assigned to
border guard duties with limited weapons (all specified in
detail). These units would be restricted to defending the borders
from attack and "controlling illicit border crossings," and not
permitted to travel in Kosovo apart from these functions.
"Three years after the entry into force of this Agreement, an
international meeting shall to be convened to determine a
mechanisms for a final settlement for Kosovo." This paragraph has
regularly been construed as calling for a referendum on
independence, not mentioned.
With regard to the rest of Yugoslavia, the terms for the
occupation are set forth in Appendix B: Status of Multi-National
Military Implementation Force. The crucial paragraph reads: 8.
NATO personnel shall enjoy, together with their vehicles, vessels,
aircraft, and equipment, free and unrestricted passage and
unimpeded access throughout the FRY including associated airspace
and territorial waters. This shall include, but not be limited to,
the right of bivouac, maneuver, billet, and utilization of any
areas or facilities as required for support, training, and
operations. The remainder spells out the conditions that permit
NATO forces and those they employ to act as they choose throughout
the territory of the FRY, without obligation or concern for the
laws of the country or the jurisdiction of its authorities, who
are, however, required to follow NATO orders "on a priority basis
and with all appropriate means." One provision states that "all
NATO personnel shall respect the laws applicable in the FRY...,"
but with a qualification to render it vacuous: "Without prejudice
to their privileges and immunities under this Appendix, all NATO
personnel...."
It has been speculated that the wording was designed so as to
guarantee rejection. Perhaps so. It is hard to imagine that any
country would consider such terms, except in the form of
unconditional surrender.
In the massive coverage of the war one will find little reference
to the Agreement that is even close to accurate, notably the
crucial article of Appendix B just quoted. The latter was,
however, reported as soon as it had become irrelevant to
democratic choice. On June 5, after the peace agreement of June 3,
the New York Times reported that under the annex to the
Rambouillet Agreement "a purely NATO force was to be given full
permission to go anywhere it wanted in Yugoslavia, immune from any
legal process," citing also the wording. Evidently, in the absence
of clear and repeated explanation of the basic terms of the
Rambouillet Agreement -- the official "peace process" -- it has
been impossible for the public to gain any serious understanding
of what was taking place, or to assess the accuracy of the
preferred version of the Kosovo Accord.
The second peace plan was presented in resolutions of the Serbian
National Assembly on March 23. The Assembly rejected the demand
for NATO military occupation, and called on the OSCE (Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe) and the UN to facilitate a
peaceful diplomatic settlement. It condemned the withdrawal of the
OSCE Kosovo Verification Mission ordered by the United States on
March 19 in preparation for the March 24 bombing. The resolutions
called for negotiations leading "toward the reaching of a
political agreement on a wide-ranging autonomy for Kosovo and
Metohija [the official name for the province], with the securing
of a full equality of all citizens and ethnic communities and with
respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the
Republic of Serbia and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia."
Furthermore, though "The Serbian Parliament does not accept
presence of foreign military troops in Kosovo and Metohija," The
Serbian Parliament is ready to review the size and character of
the international presence in Kosmet [Kosovo/Metohija] for
carrying out the reached accord, immediately upon signing the
political accord on the self-rule agreed and accepted by the
representatives of all national communities living in Kosovo and
Metohija.
The essentials of these decisions were reported on major wire
services and therefore certainly known to every news room. Several
database searchs have found scarce mention, none in the national
press and major journals.
The two peace plans of March 23 thus remain unknown to the general
public, even the fact that there were two, not one. The standard
line is that "Milosevic's refusal to accept...or even discuss an
international peacekeeping plan [namely, the Rambouillet
Agreement] was what started NATO bombing on March 24" (Craig
Whitney, New York Times), one of the many articles deploring
Serbian propaganda -- accurately no doubt, but with a few
oversights.
As to what the Serb National Assembly Resolutions meant, the
answers are known with confidence by fanatics -- different
answers, depending on which variety of fanatics they are. For
others, there would have been a way to find out the answers: to
explore the possibilities. But the enlightened states preferred
not to pursue this option; rather, to bomb, with the anticipated
consequences.
Further steps in the diplomatic process, and their refraction in
the doctrinal institutions, merit attention, but I will skip that
here, turning to the Kosovo Accord of June 3. As might have been
expected, it is a compromise between the two peace plans of March
23. On paper at least, the U.S./NATO abandoned their major
demands, cited above, which had led to Serbia's rejection of the
ultimatum. Serbia in turn agreed to an "international security
presence with substantial NATO participation [which] must be
deployed under unified command and control...under U.N auspices."
An addendum to the text stated "Russia's position [that] the
Russian contingent will not be under NATO command and its
relationship to the international presence will be governed by
relevant additional agreements." There are no terms permitting
access to the rest of the FYR for NATO or the "international
security presence" generally. Political control of Kosovo is not
to be in the hands of NATO but of the UN Security Council, which
will establish "an interim administration of Kosovo." The
withdrawal of Yugoslav forces is not specified in the detail of
the Rambouillet Agreement, but is similar, though accelerated. The
remainder is within the range of agreement of the two plans of
March 23.
The outcome suggests that diplomatic initiatives could have been
pursued on March 23, averting a terrible human tragedy with
consequences that will reverberate in Yugoslavia and elsewhere,
and are in many respects quite ominous.
To be sure, the current situation is not that of March 23. A Times
headline the day of the Kosovo Accord captures it accurately:
"Kosovo Problems Just Beginning." Among the "staggering problems"
that lie ahead, Serge Schmemann observed, are the repatriation of
the refugees "to the land of ashes and graves that was their
home," and the "enormously costly challenge of rebuilding the
devastated economies of Kosovo, the rest of Serbia and their
neighbors." He quotes Balkans historian Susan Woodward of the
Brookings Institution, who adds "that all the people we want to
help us make a stable Kosovo have been destroyed by the effects of
the bombings," leaving control in the hands of the KLA (Kosovo
Liberation Army). The U.S. had strongly condemned the KLA as
"without any question a terrorist group" when it began to carry
out organized attacks in February 1998, actions that Washington
condemned "very strongly" as "terrorist activities," probably
giving a "green light" thereby to Milosevic for the severe
repression that led to the Colombia-style violence before the
bombings precipitated a sharp escalation.
These "staggering problems" are new. They are "the effects of the
bombings" and the vicious Serb reaction to them, though the
problems that preceded the resort to violence by the enlightened
states were daunting enough.
Turning from facts to spin, headlines hailed the grand victory of
the enlightened states and their leaders, who compelled Milosevic
to "capitulate," to "say uncle," to accept a "NATO-led force," and
to surrender "as close to unconditionally as anyone might have
imagined," submitting to "a worse deal than the Rambouillet plan
he rejected." Not exactly the story, but one that is far more
useful than the facts. The only serious issue debated is whether
this shows that air power alone can achieve highly moral purposes,
or whether, as the critics allowed into the debate allege, the
case still has not been proven. Turning to broader significance,
Britain's "eminent military historian" John Keegan "sees the war
as a victory not just for air power but for the `New World Order'
that President Bush declared after the Gulf War," military expert
Fred Kaplan reports. Keegan wrote that "If Milosevic really is a
beaten man, all other would-be Milosevics around the world will
have to reconsider their plans."
The assessment is realistic, though not in the terms Keegan may
have had in mind: rather, in the light of the actual goals and
significance of the New World Order, as revealed by an important
documentary record of the '90s that remains unreported, and a
plethora of factual evidence that helps us understand the true
meaning of the phrase "Milosevics around the world." Merely to
keep to the Balkans region, the strictures do not hold of huge
ethnic cleansing operations and terrible atrocities within NATO
itself, under European jurisdiction and with decisive and mounting
U.S. support, and not conducted in response to an attack by the
world's most awesome military force and the imminent threat of
invasion. These crimes are legitimate under the rules of the New
World Order, perhaps even meritorious, as are atrocities elsewhere
that conform to the perceived interests of the leaders of the
enlightened states and are regularly implemented by them when
necessary. These facts, not particularly obscure, reveal that in
the "new internationalism...the brutal repression of whole ethnic
groups" will not merely be "tolerated," but actively expedited --
exactly as in the "old internationalism" of the Concert of Europe,
the U.S. itself, and many other distinguished predecessors.
While the facts and the spin differ sharply, one might argue that
the media and commentators are realistic when they present the
U.S./NATO version as if it were the facts. It will become The
Facts as a simple consequence of the distribution of power and the
willingness of articulate opinion to serve its needs. That is a
regular phenomenon. Recent examples include the Paris Peace Treaty
of January 1973 and the Esquipulas Accords of August 1987. In the
former case, the U.S. was compelled to sign after the failure of
the Christmas bombings to induce Hanoi to abandon the U.S.-Vietnam
agreement of the preceding October. Kissinger and the White House
at once announced quite lucidly that they would violate every
significant element of the Treaty they were signing, presenting a
different version which was adopted in reporting and commentary,
so that when North Vietnam finally responded to serious U.S.
violations of the accords, it became the incorrigible aggressor
which had to be punished once again, as it was. The same
tragedy/farce took place when the Central American Presidents
reached the Esquipulas Accord (often called "the Arias plan") over
strong U.S. opposition. Washington at once sharply escalated its
wars in violation of the one "indispensable element" of the
Accord, then proceeded to dismantle its other provisions by force,
succeeding within a few months, and continuing to undermine every
further diplomatic effort until its final victory. Washington's
version of the Accord, which sharply deviated from it in crucial
respects, became the accepted version. The outcome could therefore
be heralded in headlines as a "Victory for U.S. Fair Play" with
Americans "United in Joy" over the devastation and bloodshed,
overcome with rapture "in a romantic age" (Anthony Lewis,
headlines in New York Times, all reflecting the general euphoria
over a mission accomplished).
It is superfluous to review the aftermath in these and numerous
similar cases. There is little reason to expect a different story
to unfold in the present case -- with the usual and crucial
proviso: If we let it.